MAVRAKIS, MEGAN NICOLE, M.A. Exploring Authenticity in YouTube’s Beauty Com- munity. (2021). Directed by Dr. Tad Skotnicki. This study seeks to explore the beauty community on YouTube and how the au- dience viewing these videos about beauty products interpret authenticity in the people they watch. While also looking for how authenticity presents itself in the beauty influ- encers themselves. This study also investigates how race, gender, class, and sexuality plays a role in understanding and viewing what it means to be authentic. A content analysis was performed using two case studies Jackie Aina and Jeffree Star to study the community. Videos and comments posted from January 2019-January 2020 were studied for instances of realness. Findings concluded that authenticity was presented in two different forms: the “everyday girl” and aspirational. Commonalities of the two pre- sentations included: transparency, intimacy/vulnerability, and relatability. Race, gender, class, and sexuality, were found to have some impact on the narratives as it helped au- diences feel more intimate and connected to the individual influencer. EXPLORING AUTHENTICITY IN YOUTUBE’S BEAUTY COMMUNITY by Megan Nicole Mavrakis A Thesis Submitted to the faculty of The Graduate School at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Masters of Arts Greensboro 2021 Approved by ________Tad Skotnicki ________ Committee Chair APPROVAL PAGE This thesis written by MEGAN NICOLE MAVRAKIS has been approved by the following committee of the Faculty of The Graduate School at The University of North Carolina at Greensboro Committee Chair ____Tad Skotnicki________________________ Tad Skotnicki Committee Members __Sarah Daynes______________________ Sarah Daynes ___Dan Huebner________________________ Dan Huebner ___April 27th, 2021__________________ Date of Acceptance by Committee ___April 6th, 2021___________ Date of Final Oral Examination ii TABLE OF CONTENTS CHAPTER I: INTRODUCTION……………..….………………………………………………1 CHAPTER II: CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK………………………………………………..4 CHAPTER III: LITERATURE REVIEW………………………………………………………10 CHAPTER IV: METHODS…………………………………………………………………….22 CHAPTER V: RESULTS………………………………………………………………………29 CHAPTER VI: CONCLUSION………………………………………………………………..48 REFERENCES…………………………………………………………………………………51 iii CHAPTER I: INTRODUCTION YouTube and Instagram have elevated the business of self-branding. If you go onto a popular YouTube channel, the content creator will have an intro and outro that is their signature. They welcome the viewer and say goodbye each time one clicks on a video. The content is familiar, and they tend to stick to a certain topic. You may also notice that they are using their personality to sell subscribers a product. Maybe they have just cre- ated merchandise of their own and are now encouraging their subscribers to help sup- port them. Each creator creates an image, a personality, and a reliable and intimate look in whichever direction their content goes. It may be a fitness guru, a book lover, or a travel channel. One way or another, these individuals have built a brand around them- selves and have made their subscribers socially and financially invested in their lives. This is the effectiveness of the self-brand. Each creator has crafted a self-brand, an identity that allows others to become attached, familiarized, and to become relatable. The self-brand encourages subscribers and the audience to identify and form connec- tions with the influencer/content creator. In a world where people are expected to be their own brand, social media can catapult people to commercial success and populari- ty. It also allows people to perform identities online through videos and images. It allows people to be invested socially and become entrepreneurs. These platforms become a way for people to become “social influencers.” This individual acquires millions of sub- scribers online by creating a brand or a specific type of content on their platform. Social influencers have the power to get subscribers to buy into something. Subscribers may connect with the content creator emotionally and intellectually. They often evaluate these connections using the language of authenticity. How does a social influencer maintain authenticity? Do social influencers express real- ness through images, videos, comments, or some other way? Does this authenticity translate across mediums in different ways? Does it have the same effect on con- sumers? This also leads to the question, if they are branding themselves, and they rely on their audience connecting to their authenticity, how do they sustain authenticity? Es- 1 pecially, when becoming an influencer can become a career option. How do they stay authentic while selling products or themselves to an audience? Does social media change their approach to authenticity? In this study, I will be looking at the beauty community on the social media site YouTube. On this platform, content creators review products, conduct makeup tutorials, share tips, hair tutorials, etc (García-Rapp, 2019). Similar products, tutorials, and make-up brands are commonly reviewed, and each channel caters to a specific audience that may over- lap with other creators. I will look at two prominent influencers in the beauty community: Jackie Aina and Jeffree Star. Both influencers have created or collaborated on makeup lines and have accumulated millions of followers. My research identifies two distinct presentations of authenticity: the “everyday girl” and aspirational authenticity. These findings contribute to the literature on the performance of self-branding by exploring how these forms are evident in the performances of real- ness. By looking at the narratives and messages that Aina and Star share, I am able to see ways in which these influencers develop realness in relation to their audiences. By looking at these dynamics, we are able to gain further insight into a sphere that is heavi- ly commodified due to the consumerist nature of the community. Authenticity is quite a contradictory thing. People expect others to be “real.” They want a connection with the influencer. However, this connection that people seek can be fabri- cated but not forced. People cultivate an authentic connection in order to catapult and sustain their brands, earn profits, and to gain social influence over others. This tension of authenticity presents a unique opportunity to discover what exactly people determine to be real. While also discovering in what ways do people present themselves as au- thentic, and do certain presentations seem more fabricated than others, or are there certain ways of presenting oneself to achieve the language of authenticity in the digital age? 2 Many people sell and market an image of themselves online. Some, however, just do it for profit. I think this is interesting because we see this so often that it is important to understand what goes beneath self-branding. As technologies and platforms rise and fall one might wonder, does self-branding change, adapt, or stay the same when we market ourselves on different platforms? The situation is this: social influencers are now a dream job for Generation Z and Millennials. But, to get this level of recognition and success, to make this a career, these individuals need to have a brand. They need to have an angle. They need to have something that makes them stand out. Authenticity becomes a tool in which influencers use to enhance their brands. 3 CHAPTER II: CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK A Consumer Culture Consumer societies create the conditions for self-branding. Fieldman states that we live in a world where “everything is for sale” (Hochschild, 2011, p. 22). In such a society, people find meaning using commodities. Consumer societies rely on mass production and capitalist practices for everyday life (Sassatelli, 2017). Lury (2011) believes con- sumer cultures are a form of material culture, as it is through material goods, “it is in ac- quiring, using, and exchanging things that individuals come to have social lives” (p.14). In consumer culture, people form identities around their role as consumers. People find meaning in the objects they own, attach identities on the object, and communicate with one another through the possessions one owns and displays (Lury, 2011). In fact, “people recognize themselves in their commodities; they find their soul in their automo- bile, hi-fi set, split-level home…social control is anchored in the new needs which [the consumer] has produced” (Lury, 2011, p. 61; Marcuse, 1968, p. 24). Since identity is tied to consumption, identity then becomes a marketing tool. By focusing on the individual and empowering others, or using the message ‘you can,’ marketers fostered an actual relationship with consumers (Banet-Weiser, 2012). Social media influencers are relative- ly new participants in and contributors to consumer culture. Within this society, the definition of work also changes. Du Gay and Flemming state that work has “…shift[ed] to constructing work as a space of authenticity and incorporation of extra-organizational identity” (Yeritsian, 2018, p.705). This includes the “just be yourself” management that encourages workers to buy into the new capitalism and encourage others when working (Yeritsian, 2018). Workers are encouraged to put themselves into the work that they are making and incorporate their own identities into the workplace (Yeritsian, 2018). Others such as Kellner and Kallberg, state that the other term for the new spirit
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